Showing posts with label Blog tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blog tips. Show all posts

Monday, June 16, 2014

Quick Tips To Avoid Plagiarism Content

When it comes to seeking information regarding any subject, internet is the first place we look up to.
Unfortunately, a few websites today aren’t learner-friendly. Content creators in an aim to develop something beautiful and easily accessible, they tend to forget the learner’s goal. And they end up stealing others intellectual properties, which is why surfers often come across similar texts posted on different sites without any citation done.
However, this may or may not be intentional. As Google is very strict about the content quality and keeps on making newer algorithm updates, it is important to check your content thoroughly before it is live. Read on to know the ways to avoid the chances of plagiarism.

Quick Tips To Avoid Plagiarism Content

Here are three quick tips which can help you in avoidinig plagiarism content and improving your reputation in eye of Google.
Quick Tips To Avoid Plagiarism Content

Paraphrase it appropriately

SEO writers are quick to learn the art of doing detailed internet research, in order to compose an article on any topic. And in an intention to save time, they often end up adopting some questionable habits, which automatically hinders the search engine optimization efforts. This is why Google’s algorithms are used to find out duplicate content. If two texts have consecutive 4 words common, the document that has been posted first will appear at first.
Though, composing unique content is appreciated, if you are running short of ideas you can paraphrase it from some other texts. However, remember to choose completely separate set of words while paraphrasing. It is recommended to make a fresh start rather than jumbling the words.

Avoid Repeating Structure

Duplicating words is not only considered as an act of plagiarism, but also duplicating structure is illegal in a lot of cases. Whether it is due to impending deadline or lack of ideas, writers often get tempted to borrow ideas. Hence, making use of an article to create a new one is plagiarism. While writing SEO article originality is essential, in order to maintain the site’s reputation.
Fortunately, there are a few online sources, which enable the writers to get their works check for plagiarism before posting it. These sites, other than displaying the percentage of the duplicate text, they provide links to the documents, thereby highlighting the words that were copied. Therefore, it is suggested to pass your article through such plagiarism tool in order to avoid any duplicity.
Even after restrictions self-plagiarism do happen. And one of the main reasons behind this is writers composing articles on same topic almost regularly. Unknowingly, often words or sentences are repeated. Thus, using a plagiarism tool may help to avoid such mistakes.

Highlight Original Ideas

Be original while creating your content.
Not only will this lessen the probability of plagiarism, but also will draw more traffic towards the post. Learners or surfers would take interest in your blog post, if they find something new has been offered. This way it will boost the ranking in the popular search engine as well. And in order to bring forth new ideas, you would need to do a great deal of research. Therefore, avoid taking resource from a particular link.
Prepared using the http://plagiarism-detect.org/


Read more: http://allbloggingtips.com/2014/05/20/to-dos-for-avoiding-plagiarism/#ixzz34nUL4miN

How to Integrate Email Marketing with Social Media?

With the advent of social media, it might be easy to think that email marketing has become outdated or even redundant but statistics gleaned from a 2011 StrongMail survey suggests otherwise.
In fact, according to their data, over 68% of business leaders affirmed that they would be looking to integrate social media into their email marketing strategies and not the other way around.
In addition, the respondents also indicated that they would be increasing investment in this area. This directly counteracts Mark Zuckerberg’s claim that email marketing would be replaced by integrated social media messaging services.

Is Social Media Time Proof?

Despite the astronomical rise of social media, email still tends to be the preferred method of communication between professionals and in a B2B environment.
Social Media and Email Marketing
To think about this preference in a more personal light, one needs only to think about how many times we check our email each week, or even each day. The majority of office based professionals will have their inbox close at hand, constantly, throughout the day.
The use of social media networks, on the other hand, is still mostly discouraged in a professional environment.
This does, however, clearly demonstrate the difference between what is considered appropriate, or not, with regards to different kinds of communication. Despite email being the communication method of choice for office based professionals in a workplace environment, the popularity of social media suggests that, outside this environment, social networking is the preferred option.

Integration to Accumulate

It seems that, in order for a business to maximize its communicative reach, best practice must be to implement an integration of social media and email marketing. Indeed, social media and email have a lot to offer one another, and they share many similar features. Both are the type of direct response which is used to relay information and encourage interaction, and both work best when they are targeted according to relevancy.
Both social media and email also have shortcomings, which may be negated by the other. For example, social media messages have a short shelf life, but email can be used to remind customers about a social media message, after the event.

Integrate Your Social Media and Email Marketing

There are many ways in which you could integrate your social media and email marketing efforts, including:
  • Advertising and promoting email sign up across your social media accounts.
  • Including social media one-click buttons in your emails.
  • Providing an incentive for users to sign up for your emails, such as giveaways and promotions.
All of these methods have proven to be effective ways of integrating social media and email marketing; and, as has been the case with social media and email marketing themselves, they work best when implemented together as part of a comprehensive digital marketing strategy.

Read more at http://www.bloggingtips.com/2014/06/10/integrate-email-marketing-social-media/#0B94drbosQUyWxB0.99

6 Productivity Tips for Getting Things Done Fast

Do you find it hard sometimes to focus on your important tasks? Do you start too many tasks and projects but never finish any? And you’re not achieving the results you’re looking for as a result?
If you answer yes to any of the questions, it’s probably because you’re not managing your time very effectively. The following tips will help you manage your time and get things done fast and efficiently.

6 Productivity Tips for Getting Things Done Fast

1. Become clear of what you want to achieve

Firstly, you work at a project or task to achieve something. But if you’re not clear or don’t know exactly what you want to achieve, it will be difficult for you to know the steps you need to take to achieve your goals and you can’t stay motivated.
So determine what your short term and long term goals are and set deadlines for them. For example, what do you want to get or achieve in a year, or five years from now? What about in a week, a month, or 6 months? And what do you need to do to achieve both your long term and short term goals and when?
First get the general, big picture of the steps you need to take in the long term. Then list down specifically what tasks you need to undertake now.

2. Find an accountability partner

One of the greatest things about being self-employed is the freedom of not having to report to a boss or do what you choose to do.  However, that can also be a bad thing if you don’t know how to keep yourself accountable.
The truth is, it’s not always easy to keep yourself accountable or set your goals, create action plans, and check your progress, all on your own.
What you can do instead is agree with someone else to become accountability partners of each other. You’ll share with them about your goals, and plan of actions and they’ll continually check your progress, remind you of your action plans, and from time to time give you a friendly kick in the butt. You’ll also reciprocate and do the same to them so you both can stay on track and focused on achieving your goals.

3. Tackle your important tasks first

Sometimes, your to-do list can have a lot of items and if you start your day with tasks that are not important or urgent, you might reach the end of the day without accomplishing anything of significance.
To avoid this happening, determine what your important tasks are and do them first. Even if you haven’t done everything on your to do list by the end of the day, you’ll still accomplish a lot. Remember, the 80/20 rule always applies.

4. Arrange your files and folders in an organized manner

We sometimes can waste several minutes in the middle of a task browsing through folders just to find a single file.
Not being able to find what you want when you want it, will not only waste your time but also destruct you from focusing on what you’re working at.
Take some time and organize your folders in a way that you can to find files fast and easily. For example, if you were working on a number of websites, you could create different folders for each website with names such as “Site1″, “Site2″ etc…
If, then you wanted to start an article marketing campaign to promote your site number 1, for example, you would create a new folder named “Articles” under the “Site1″ folder and store your newly written articles in that folder.
Come up with a file management system that works best for you as soon as you can. By doing so you can save time and stay focused.

5. Get a private working place

Another good part about running an online business is that you can work from anywhere or any place. You can work in a coffee shop or in your bedroom in your pajamas as long as you have a computer an internet access.
But if you really want to take your business to the next level, you need to consider getting some private space that is free from destruction so that you can work uninterruptedly. This way, your productivity level will rise and you can achieve more.

6. Block social media websites

How many times have you ever found yourself chatting, watching videos, checking emails or instant messaging on social media websites in the middle of a task? You can get sidetracked easily and find yourself spending more time than necessary on those sites.
If you can’t stop or limit yourself, you can use tools like “Anti-Social” to block out social media websites on your computer.
There you have it, six tips for becoming more productive. All in all, if you set clear goals, become accountable, and avoid destructions, you can achieve what you want in your online marketing endeavors.
Do you have any other tips for getting things done even faster?

Friday, April 11, 2014

8 Key Tips for Building Successful Website

1. Content (Useful, informative, free, and easy to understand)

If you offer well written, original, easy to understand information, spiced up with good imagery, the chances of getting quality links, social media exposure and high spots in SERPs are bigger. The whole point of the Internet is finding useful, relevant, free information. Everything is about information. If you’re able to convey it in a manner that stands out from the crowd you’re automatically step ahead from the others in the pool.

2. Basic SEO

I vouch for the fact that you don’t have to be a SEO expert to rank your site high on Google search. Just several things to remember here:
  • include meta title tags,
  • optimal and natural usage of keywords,
  • provide good link bait article titles,
  • simple navigation through out the site,
  • proper usage of H1, H2 and H3 tags,
  • include sitemap,
  • use Google Webmaster Tools and Google Analytics to gain insight on what works and what’s not,
  • use robots.txt file,
  • proper permalink structure,
  • avoid duplicate content (CMS issue),
  • use canonical tags.
  • read the Google SEO Starter Guide (PDF).

3. Design

You want more eyeballs on your website, and you want them to stick with it more often. Except offering quality content you’ll need some good graphics for your site. Number one tip: If you’re serious about your site don’t use free, generic template. I would go even further. Don’t use paid template that is available online for others to buy. Pay someone to design a unique website for you. It doesn’t need to be jaw dropping and very expensive. A simple, pretty enough, and unique look would be good for starters.

4. Competitors

Whatever you do, you have to be more innovative, original, have a better design, better content than your competitors. Simply try to beat the competition. Use them to learn what works for them, and what doesn’t. Don’t be antagonistic towards them. Instead try to befriend them and let them become your mentors. They rule your niche at this moment. Learn what they did in order to achieve what they are now. That doesn’t mean just to read their blogs daily, but to investigate what they are doing. Where is their presence, who is linking to them, what CMS are they using, their SEO etc.

5. Promotion

Promote your site whenever you have a chance to do it, but do not exaggerate (don’t be a spammer). Also several things to remember here:
  • use Facebook, Twitter, Google+, or any other social platform popular at the moment,
  • comment on other blogs related to your niche,
  • be active on forums,
  • guest post frequently on well established blogs,
  • pay for ads if you really have to (Adwords).
This will certainly lead to significant exposure of your site. If you have the previous 4 points in place it’s just a matter of time when the ball starts rolling.

6. Speed

Make your site load fast as much as possible. This is important from two aspects: user experience and a SEO factor. Several things to remember:
  • Use good server
  • Optimize your code,
  • Optimize the images,
  • Use sprites,
  • Use tools such as Google Speed, YSlow, Web Page Test, Pingdom,
  • Gzip and minify your pages and static components where possible,
  • Make your pages cacheable (both server and browser side),
  • Use CDN for static content,
  • If you’re using scripts, prefer asynchronous loading or place them at the bottom,
  • Avoid redirects,
  • Read in details what Google and Yahoo have to say about it.

7. E-mail addresses and RSS subscribers

Usually young webmasters and bloggers are overwhelmed with information and it might happen to forget to implement thing or two or they may think that some of the tips are irrelevant and not worth. So remember, capture e-mail addresses and get people to subscribe to your feed early. Two-three years from now (if you’re good) you might have 50k email list and 50k RSS Subcribers. And that is a big valuable asset. Trust me.

8. Monetization

This is the cherry on top of the cake. It’s time to gather the fruits of your labor. I’ll suggest don’t do it early. Wait some time until your blog gets traction. The possibilities are virtually endless and experimentation is the key. There are basically three main methods to get money out of your blog/site:
  • Placing ads (CPC, CPM, CPA, CPV). Basically you need click, page view, action or video view in order to get paid.
  • Promoting affiliate products.
  • Selling you own products (ebooks, membership websites, services — design, coding, coaching, etc).
Wrap up
Of course these 8 tips are not everything you should have in mind but I would say they’re essential. Anyhow, the most important tip would be that you do your experiments with everything I said above and come to your own conclusions about what works for you, your blog and your niche.

Source: dailyblogtips.com

Thursday, December 19, 2013

SEO Best Practices: Setting Up a Blog

Blog Subdirectory vs Subdomain
Your blog should be the centerpiece of a larger initiative, one that engages your target audience in a "human" way, with the goal of creating signals that will aid/support what you're trying to achieve with SEO.
One mistake many businesses still make is creating posts that consist of self-promotion with little "meat" to entice anyone to engage with the content, much less share the content (in the hopes that you might earn a link or two, or any "viral" activity to the post, whatsoever).

What Are You Trying to Achieve?

One of the first things you have to consider is – indeed – what you're trying to achieve. How you answer the following questions will guide one of the most important steps that you'll take when setting up a blog:
  • Do you have issues with reputation management – i.e., negative brand mentions in the search engine results pages (SERPs)?
  • Are you trying to build thought-leadership for your company/brand?
  • Are you trying to build a channel to drive deep linking to specific pages of your website?
  • Are you trying to build depth of content or develop a tool to target "human queries" for your otherwise "corporate" website?
  • Do you want your blog to be non-branded and/or seen as a unique "unbiased" voice in your industry?

Setting Up Your Blog

Once you know you're trying to achieve, you need to consider where the blog resides. Should you use a subdirectory, a subdomain, a completely separate domain, or either WordPress or Blogger? Let's look at all the options.

Blog on a Subdirectory

More often than not, this is how I recommend clients set up a blog. In my opinion (and "yes", SEOs will have varying opinions on this), adding fresh content to the root domain is a good thing. I also believe that having an RSS feed of "latest blog posts" to the home page of the website is a good thing.
I believe that promoting content that resides "on" the website is a good thing because you can earn (deep) links and provide balance to your link profile. And, I believe that having thought-leadership content that is closely associated with your brand (resides, again, on the domain) is a good thing.
Pros:
  • Add fresh content to the root domain.
  • Add deep links (from other websites)/social signals directly to root domain (assuming that you've promoted this content well).
Cons:
  • Won't provide an additional "brand" listing (in most cases) in the SERPs, so doesn't serve well for reputation management.
  • No direct ability to get links "from another website/sub-domain".

Blog on a Subdomain

A good case can be made for why you might want to blog on a subdomain.
For example, perhaps you have issues with reputation management (perhaps someone posted to review complaint sites like Ripoff Report, Pissed Consumer, etc.) so you need to occupy additional real estate in the SERPs. By building your blog on a subdomain, you accomplish this by providing the search engines another "official web presence" (the search engines will treat this as a separate entity) for your company, that should rank when folks search your company name.
The nice thing about having a blog on a sub-domain is that it will also piggyback on the authority of your root website (hopefully you already have some authority on your root domain) and posts there can rank, without the need to build up the authority for a new website.
Pros:
  • Get an additional brand presence in the SERPs that you control.
  • Get links "from another website" (subdomains are treated pretty much as such); Ability to deep-link to specific pages within the root.
  • Piggyback on the already "built" (again, making an assumption here) authority of the root domain.
  • Can be hosted anywhere. Very important consideration for those on a content management system that does not provide a blogging platform.
Cons:
  • Not as much freshness on the domain.
  • Content that "hits" (gets good promotion/links) doesn't add as much link value to the root.

Blog on a Separate Domain

Some people like to create a "non-official" blog presence, to have control over a website that isn't directly tied to the brand. They want to have an "unbiased" voice (at least give the appearance of such) and probably use this to occasionally link to their main website.
I typically discourage these types of initiatives, for many reasons – not the least of which is the amount of effort that would need to go into making this new web presence gain any amount of trust/traction or authority.
Pros:
  • Can create an "unbiased" resource (that just happens to link to your corporate website, on occasion).
  • If the content is good, and it becomes respected in your industry, the blog can gain authority that can then be passed through to your corporate website through "unbiased" linking.
Cons:
  • There's a better than average chance that gaining good authority/ability for posts to rank is going to take considerable time.
  • Does little to really show thought-leadership for your company.
  • If you really do drop links to the corporate website, there's a good chance that it'll be seen for what it is: a paid advertisement, not an official unbiased reference. The backlash from this could be (should be) huge.

Blog on WordPress.com or Blogger

Some pretty large companies have gone this route because – to them – it's the easiest to execute. Mind you, a link from WordPress.com isn't a bad thing, but how does this help with any of the aforementioned reasons why you might want to blog in the first place?
Are you tying in the "thought leadership" to the brand? Are you adding fresh content to the domain? Are you aiding your abilities to provide an additional "official brand presence" to the SERPs? (Perhaps, but you're better off with subdomain).
Pros:
  • You could create some very aggressive link building tactics or "test" things without burning the domain.
  • You would gain a link that is coming from an authority domain (remember, a quality link profile is about gaining links from many different/authoritative/relevant websites/domains; not many links on one domain)
  • Easy. Just about anyone can get engaged and start blogging today.
Cons:
  • Limitations as to how you can design/template to fit your brand.
  • Any content promoted (linked to) won't provide direct value to your main company website/domain.
  • Inability to utilize plugins.
  • Cheesy. It is what it is. Not gonna be a great representation for your company.

Summary

Blogging should be a part of any sound marketing plan, nowadays. You need to create engagement and provide the ability for people to share content coming from your company. Face it, very few people are going to feel compelled to share your "service page", much less link to it.
Do blogging for the right reasons, and set it up in the right manner for your needs and you'll realize positive results.
Now that you've addressed best practices for setting up your blog, realize that you're just getting started...

How to Get Out of Niches and Blog for a Purpose Instead

Money is not everything. Anything beyond an optimum amount causes more misery than happiness.
Yet, with a stereotypical assumption that most of us want to make money (let’s not kid ourselves by saying “no” to this assumption), we all have a tendency to get stuck in a rut: the dirty groove of a routine that we get comfortable with over time. Even the advice we receive, the articles we write, and everything we believe in becomes congruent with this comfort zone.
For bloggers, it translates to finding niches, writing 500 word posts, and promoting your blog using the same methods we’ve always been used to. That includes social media, asking for links, putting up sign-up forms for opt-ins, some paid advertising, and then wondering how else to promote the blog.
If you’ve been doing whatever you’ve been doing, how will you get to where you want to go?
It’s time to do something different.
We all know passion pours energy into our life. It gives us more chutzpah to do what we want. It drives our efforts to reach our goals.
If you pick niches, blog multiple times a day, and work like a machine to promote your blog, here’s what happens..
Passion wears out..
Frustration sets in..
You’ll develop stress. Finally, you’ll give up.
Ignore the popular advice.
Forget the damn niches. ;)
If you have to blog, do so for a purpose. Here are different ways to find your purpose:

What is that one thing that pisses you off?

How to Get Out of Niches and Blog for a Purpose Instead?
We all have our pet peeves, don’t we?
Maybe you love to do something but your lifestyle is your biggest enemy. Maybe you actually travel and you don’t like the way immigration procedures and visa restrictions don’t allow you to travel free. You could have been scammed online before and you just can’t get over it. Or maybe you got dumped unceremoniously by your girlfriend. Perhaps, you hate the well-orchestrated, social brainwash that marriage really is.
Find your biggest source of frustration; go and blog about it. Chances are that you’ll not worry about word counts and blog post lengths. There’s a possibility that many others in the world would relate to you.
Relating to the topic on hand, by the way, is half the business done.

Find a real business, blog for that business

How to Get Out of Niches and Blog for a Purpose Instead?
Don’t blog about a topic. Instead, find a real business and apply your passion for blogging into a blog built for your business. Why? An unbelievable amount of “you” gets into your business, whether you know it or not.
Hatching that idea, sticking with it, and grabbing a business plan template off the web are the starting points. Beyond that, you’d give your business everything (including startup capital, sacrifices, the comfort of a day job, and the wholesome approval of people who mean so much to you). You will not sound or feel normal after so much goes into starting and running a business.
Your blog now reflects the new “you,” doesn’t it? Whatever you went through until this stage of your business (assuming you go with this idea) helps you communicate better. You are stronger, and you have an attitude to kill for.

Blog for a cause, to make a difference

How to Get Out of Niches and Blog for a Purpose Instead?
If starting and running a full-fledged business (such as ecommerce, maybe) is not your thing, let’s get back to blogging.
Niches are popular and commercial. They evoke responses from customers such as “buy,” “buy later,” “no way, it’s too expensive,” and “nah, not for me.” If you don’t directly pitch for anything in your blog, all you’ll get is “ah,” “duh,” or “I see. Wow!”
Blog for a cause, instead, and you’ll mostly get responses like “I so want to help, if I could,” “Where is the donate button?” “I like what this person does,” “This is so true,” and “Wow, really?”
Now, causes don’t have to charitable. You could find a cause within commercial domains too. You can find a cause anywhere. All you have to do is look for something that’s troubling you, and you know that a lot of other people are also affected by it.
Look at what SaltyDroid does:
The trouble seed: Online scammers on the rise
The cause: Exposing scammers, thieves, and fraud “gurus” with make-believe opportunities
Does SaltyDroid sell anything? No.
Does it get traffic? Next question please.

Experiment until you find the purpose

How to Get Out of Niches and Blog for a Purpose Instead?
Learning the art of blogging after you find your purpose will draw you in very late to the game. When the purpose comes calling, you have to hit the ground running. You have to be ready by then. That’s why it’s important to keep blogging everyday. How do you become a better blogger? Write blog posts every day.
What’s the secret to passionate blogging? Using your well-developed blogging skills to write about things that matter to you (and others).
In a nutshell, you have to do all the dreaming, thinking, and executing while you already have a blog in place. Now, you know that your choice of niche wouldn’t matter too. Pick a topic, start a blog and run with it. Think of this as your experiment.
Experiment until you find your passion. Once you find it, give your blog everything you’ve got.

Grammar? Rules? What’s that?

How to Get Out of Niches and Blog for a Purpose Instead?
Read all the blogs you want on “how to blog better.” Brush up on your basics of writing (add copywriting to the mix). Yet, don’t think that what you read is the only “right” way to do things out there. You can make your own rules. Copywriters, for instance, break rules all the time. Find your voice. Make your writing reflect that voice. If you have to twist sentence structures, do so. If you have to invent your own words or phrases, like labeling yourself as an “anti-niche blogging rebel” go ahead and do it.
This is your playground. Go play. ;)
Your passion should show. Success will follow.
Are you stuck with niches or are you blogging from your heart? Do you have a purpose yet? Share it with us!


Read more: http://allbloggingtips.com/2013/12/17/blog-for-a-purpose/#ixzz2nwEJI4WG

Sell More With The Right Look For Your Website

To sell products online, you need to have a good looking ecommerce website. Even if you have never set up a website before, you can still have the kind of web design which will bring in the kind of attention you are looking for. Just make sure you include in your website design pictures of your products, a shopping cart and an about us section.
If you are in the business of selling t-shirts, a good looking website coupled with all the above elements, it is possible for you to sell even more t-shirts than you might have thought possible. After all, there are quite a few people who purchase t-shirts over the Internet.


Add Pictures of Your T-Shirts

The majority of people who are going to your site would like to see all of your products, and they can only do this if you have pictures posted on your site. No good retail site design would be complete without pictures of the merchandise. Make sure you take them in HD quality so the visitors to the site will be able to zoom in and see every detail of the shirts. Keep in mind, they cannot touch or feel the shirts, so giving them the ability to see as much detail as possible is the only way you can get them to buy.


Add a Shopping Cart

Another element your tshirt design website template should have is a shopping cart. This way, as people are looking at all of the shirts, they can simply click on the shirt and it will drop into the cart. This may cost you a little extra to include on your site, but it will pay for itself when the orders start rolling in. Additionally, this is the kind of thing most consumers are looking for when they are visiting a retail site. If you do not have this on your site, people may not feel comfortable buying from you. It has the appearance of a site set up to fool people, rather than a real website set up to sell shirts.


Add an About Us Section

Your site also needs an about us section in the website design. This is the section where people can learn about your business and the people behind the business. After all, people like to buy from people. If they can see you are real people who care about the kinds of shirts you are selling, you will have a much better chance or selling more shirts. There should be a tab on the main page visitors can click on to navigate to the about us page. From the about us page, visitors should have the option to follow one of the other tabs to learn more about the company, or to start buying some shirts.
If you follow these instructions, your website will help you to make more money and be more successful. After all, small businesses have a better advantage than ever before thanks to the ability to the Internet, according to Forbes.

The Do's and Don'ts On Growing Your Twitter Following

Many businesses have discovered the power of Twitter due to its low cost, immediacy and viral nature. However, it's not easy to develop a following. The idea is not the number of people that follow you but how many are relevant. Having over 20,000 followers who do not respond to your Tweets is like playing a guitar to a herd of goats. Here are some things you need to do or avoid to create an engaging audience.


Start with a profile picture and make sure it's your photo

The picture has to be big enough and in high resolutions because many people will check your profile before they follow you. After your house is in order, find and follow relevant people. Search for these people from the many Twitter directories out there. Ensure that you find people who are in your area of interest or have followers you intend to target. You can leverage other people's twitter lists.


Tweet interesting stuff

This is easier said than done. To get interesting content try the Google Alerts by signing up for updates about concepts that interest audiences in your field. Share media by posting photos and videos so that you page gets click through and comments. Read what your audience is writing about and comment often.
Interesting subject within a perfectly composed tweet will grab attention and maximize exposure.


Engage your audience all the time

grow Twitter followers
Even if a follower did not comment back on your Tweet does not mean you cannot engage them again. Get involved with chats by using hash-tags. By joining appropriate chat forums is a quick way to build a following. You may schedule your chats so that you can reach a wider audience across the world. Note when people respond to your tweets when scheduling your chats and use a time saving tools when scheduling. Follow people that follow your comments or Tweets.


Promote your Twitter account by using other sources and channels

Put a Twitter follow button or Twitter updates widget in your website or blogs,  and include your Twitter handle in emails. You can also promote in social media outposts. To keep people engaged, try and multitask by Tweeting when in the bus, during commercials when watching your favourite program or when watching a match.


3 Don'ts When Using Hash-tags

  • Don't include too many hash-tags because people don't like that kind of self-promotion. Overcrowded tweet looks spammy and may deter readers.
  • Don't be too specific because many follows will not see your Tweets according to the search engine. Instead used more general terms like blogging or social media for the engine to place your Tweet on higher priority (hash-tag the terms). 
  • A bad habit is in filling in your article with hash-tags. This makes your Tweets unreadable and followers will get bored reading your stuff. The content of your article must be relevant to your niche and catchy enough to arouse a response. 
While you build and grow your followers, Twitter notices you and recommends other accounts to you. Guest blogging is another popular link building strategy that can increase followers. This is a process where your articles get published in high ranking sites and makes your presence known by potential Tweet followers.

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

9,000 Uniques in One Day: A Viral Marketing Case Study

One of the most popularised examples of viral marketing is that of Microsoft's Hotmail (now Outlook Online) email service. Every single email sent using the site came attached with a small signature which read "Get your free e-mail at Hotmail." Doug Rushoff was one of the first people to use the phrase viral marketing online, and likened the concept to someone who is susceptible to an idea being infected by another, and then sharing it with others, in turn "infecting" them.
The Hotmail example fits this ideology perfectly, and helped propel the service to a point where it was adding in excess of 270,000 new users every single day.
The concept of something going viral doesn't just apply to the internet of course. Another phrase associated with the idea—word of mouth—is definitely more relevant to the offline world. It may be watching a TV show and going into work to talk about it, reaching more people who then watch the show and tell even more people. It may be having a great experience at a restaurant and telling a friend, who visits that very restaurant and then tells even more people to go.
The end result is that one person can help something spread to far more people than themselves. The internet has simply made it much easier for one person to reach a huge audience with a message that's worth sharing. In the last 10 years, the number of people using the Internet has gone from being measured in millions to being measured in billions.
This was a version of the planned introduction for the book Viral Marketing for Dummies which Wiley asked me to publish a little over a year ago.
Though I actually quit my contract and stopped working on the book (long story), I've still been involved in various viral marketing campaigns. The one I would like to share with you right now was built purely to show that the ideas I was sharing in the book actually had merit.

Join a story rather than creating a new one

Though it's certainly not impossible to create your own viral category to get some buzz, it makes your job much, much easier if someone is already talking about a topic that you can leverage for your own gain.
Lyndon Antcliff, most notable for fooling the world's media into thinking that a teenager stole his Dad's credit card to play Xbox with a hooker, is very good at this. He often tweets the latest viral trends and helps his clients to capitalise on hot topics of the moment.
Again, you don't have to only take advantage of what people are saying now. When Monster Slippers wanted their slipper company to go viral, they created an elaborate story to say that a Chinese manufacturing incident left one customer with a size 1,450 shoe, almost as big as a car.
The story was picked up by multiple news outlets, all linking to Monster Slippers as they were the one to break the story. That was until they all figured out the customer who received the unusually large footwear actually looked identical to a staff member of Monster Slippers.
I didn't have anything I actually wanted to promote in my example, besides a cause that I believed strongly in, so decided to pick up on a news event that a lot of people were talking about: The demise of Google Reader and, potentially, Feedburner too.

Stick to one core theme

"What did the fox say?" just wouldn't be the same if we also wanted to know what the eagle, walrus, and piranha say too.
The Old Spice videos featuring actor Bruce Cambpell basically ran as an idea that you couldn't be Bruce with his great physique and confidence, but you could at least smell like him. They didn't run with this theme just once, but used it in multiple highly successful commercials.
Old Spice is a smell. It doesn't necessarily make you smell better than any other product. There's nothing inherently amazing about it. Yet after those commercials ran, you couldn't walk into a supermarket and find it on shelves very easily. They found one theme and stuck with it, even creating unique videos for Redditors in an AMA format.
Another reason for sticking to one core theme is that you really have to give sharing a purpose (next section). If there's no clear message that you want to spread, it's hard for people to get behind the idea and want to share it with others, whatever it may be.
I've already mentioned that I wanted my idea to focus on the news events surrounding the demise of Google Reader as well as the potential demise of Google's Feedburner product. I think it was much better for me to pick one of these rather than try to get the message across about both.
You couldn't save Google Reader after it was announced to be shut down, but Feedburner still has some legs (for now) and that's the one I care about the most.

Make it easy to share, and give sharing a purpose (!)

This is possibility the most overused advice when it comes to teaching people how to get ideas to go viral but it is still relevant. Of course, you can't just stick social media buttons onto a site and expect something to instantly spread across the social stratosphere (that's what we're calling it these days, right?).
Not only did I put sharing buttons on my site, but I also decided to actually give people the text they could use on sites like Twitter and Facebook.
Going back to my earlier point about purpose, people had to believe that they would actually get a response and that sharing would do something productive. Whether that's positioning themselves as someone who is intelligent and in on the latest news (whether it's movies, the next viral video, etc.) or, like me, they wanted to rally behind a cause.
One of my good blogger friends actually tweeted the story without knowing about it.
Thanks Steve!

Execute properly

Though I had no real idea if the Feedburner minisite would actually take off, it was worth a try. I wasn't actually promoting anything besides having a case study for the book I was writing, but even still, I wanted to at least make it look semi-professional and not just like a random blog post on a website.
I thought about not only the big details—like why Feedburner might actually shut down—but also the small details, like having an upside-down Feedburner logo as the website favicon. I also decided to take a comic strip style approach and use my limited skills in Photoshop to put together something hopefully, as least slightly, humorous.
There was even a comment that said I ripped off the style of the Oatmeal which I'll take as a compliment judging by Matt's huge success after working here at Moz.
Finally, I also enlisted the help of three others to throw in the ever-important cat pictures with the hashtag #pleasedontkillfeedburner. Thanks to Ramsay and Chris for kindly sharing pictures of their cats which I could also use in the comic.
To put together the theme of the site, I simply headed over to my usual design haunt, ThemeForest, and picked up a template. Then I got to work in Photoshop without caring too much for standards or usability. I viewed the project as time-sensitive, so I wanted to get something up as quickly as possible.
Just be careful which font you use...
Funny; that's not even Comic Sans.

The end result

Just to clarify, the only piece of promotion I did for this was around two personal tweets and I emailed no more than six people about the idea. If you consider that a tweet of mine would only get a few dozen clicks, I was quite surprised by what happened when I woke up the next day: The site made the homepage of Hacker News.
Here are the stats for the first week of the site going live:
To give even more transparency, here's a list of some of the sources which sent traffic. Notice that a lot of the tweets sent a surprising amount of people to the page:
There are a lot more but that screenshot was getting long enough as it is. Here are a few other results from this campaign:
  • The site has between 300-500 backlinks (!) depending on which link checker you use
  • The domain is now a PR 4
  • It has been shared on social media over 1,400 times
  • The entire website was built in less than one day
Some people might argue that I'm fortunate that the article went viral on Hacker News (I didn't submit it, and don't know who did). If you're one of those people, well I'll just say that I'm also "fortunate" to have the idea for the site, to register the domain, to contact people for cat photos, to spend a day in Photoshop and to actually execute my idea.
Of course, not everything you create with the idea of 'going viral' is going to be a hit. But if you keep focusing on creating content that follows this outline (relevant to hot topics, gives people a reason to share, execute the idea properly) then no doubt that something you create is going to get a lot of attention.
Even with this campaign there were a few mistakes I made:
  • The site looks terrible on mobile devices. Seriously, don't bother opening it in your iPad
  • I lost the account access to the email used in the graphic so I have no idea if Google responded after the initial buzz (duh!)
  • Ideally this would have been a campaign I could have linked to other web properties after the traffic burst subsided
Though in recent months I've been a very public advocate on the ViperChill blog that, quite simply, quality content doesn't rank as well as it should, I still believe in it. Every time I've showed terrible websites ranking highly in Google, I've always stated that I would love for the opposite to be the case.
If you would like to hear more about this topic (I wrote 20,000+ words for the book before scrapping the idea) then please let me know in the comments, and I'll see what I can do. There is a lot more to cover, but hopefully this post gave you a bit of inspiration about taking action on those random ideas I'm sure you have from time to time.
As a final plug, I've actually just started a brand new niche site case study (introduction post here) where 3 people will be tackling the same niche from three different angles. One of us is using only SEO, I'm relying purely on creating great content and the third contributor is a total beginner to creating sites who has all options available to him.